In many places you’re pretty much gonna be what your parents were. Although not impossible, I don’t see how the average factory worker in Birmingham can ever get to the next level when the govt garnishes half of his wages in taxes. It is not physically impossible. Talk about “old money” but y’all have a boat load of it.
And we do all that at the same time maintaining the worlds’ finest military, but I’m happy to concede the Brits are about the only people over there that can defend themselves.
And I’ll say this, I feel more at home
there than in some of the places HERE.
Sorry, just a couple of last comments. The average factory worker in Birmingham is probably an administrator, an engineer or a technician, because there are almost no factories working on old-style production lines anymore, it’s not cost effective.
If he wants to advance his career by taking a degree, he can do it, and the government will give him a grant of £1000 a year, a 0% real interest loan (the interest is equal to the rate of inflation, so no real increase in value) of up to £5,000 a year, and when he graduates,
after he’s earning more than £15,000 a year, then he’ll start paying it back through the tax system. We now have nearly 50% of the population with university degrees. British employers also tend to invest much more in their employees. My last employer paid for 50% of my Masters degree which I studied part-time while working for them. Not only that, but British citizens can work and trade anywhere in the European Union, on an equal footing with their European competitors.
If he’s earning an average salary, the government will only be taking 28% of his salary in tax, and the 1st £5000 is tax free, which is the same as many states in America taking federal and state taxes together. Only when you’re earning more than £40,000 a year will the government take 40%, and that’s the highest rate. And of course, that’s his only outlay, except perhaps a company pension. No private healthcare contributions. (don’t forget to double all these figures when converting to $US)
‘Old money’ doesn’t have much influence in Britain anymore. Of the 100 richest people in the UK, only 4 of them are hereditary aristocrats, and they’re not rich because of their titles, but because they invested their money wisely in business ventures. Most of the ‘old money’ are now very poor because they have to pay tax on land that’s too small for profitable farming but too large for any other use. Most of the rich are self-made, like Richard Branson or Sir Paul McCartney. Americans get confused by this because they see the ‘sir’ or ‘lord’ before someone’s name and think they must be old money. These titles are no longer handed down through families but are handed out for life to someone who’s made a contribution to British society.
I’m more proud to call myself a European than a Brit though. I’m most proud that our continent got together after the last World War and decided
never again. I’m proud that our army go out to the world to keep peace in Afghanistan and Kosovo and Sierra Leone (but not so proud that they’re in the other place), but I’m even more proud that, like our European neighbours, we no longer need that army to defend us from one another. We will never face another invasion, and am proud that we can spend less on our defences and more on helping one another.